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Sat Dec 5
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The Star Trek 3-movie series is actually Wrath of Khan (II), Search for Spock (III), and Voyage Home (IV). While III was the weakest of the three, IV was still in the lead for box office receipts last time I looked. And it was a great fun film, after two really dark entries.
Return is my favorite star wars film, and star wars before anything else is my biggest fandom. As i know this will gain alot of confusion(well aware jedi isn't loved) here is my ranking of the films
@Neon: I just rewatched ROTJ because it was on Spike. It was actually worse than I remembered... really overlong and kind of limp, especially in the second half. The Emperor's plan seems kind of moronic too.
IJ: Last Crusade was arguably better than the first two.
Star Trek 3 did not suck. Quite the opposite, in fact, it's a good movie with a lot of action and plenty of heart. Just watched it again on Blu-Ray, and was heartily entertained.
Jedi was 2/3 of a great movie.
Not saying that most 3rd installments don't suck. Indeed, they usually do. Just had to take issue with these 3.
Sorry, didn't read theshadowalker's post above -- which is a pity because the line about "Batman Forever" being a threat rather than a title is very, very clever. And I agree with everything else theshadowalker says --
-- except that I think the level of writing in "Last Crusade" showed off a lot of the wit that the late Jeffrey Boam had brought to "Brisco County Jr.," and the Indy backstory was intriguing (enough so to launch a sub-franchise), and many of the set-pieces are among the best in the series: the Nazi book-burning, Henry Sr. bringing down an airplane with a flock of birds, the moment of choice regarding the final destiny of the Grail ...
I think it's a good movie, and is arguably the only good threequel ever made.
(All of this does make me think I need to watch "Son of Frankenstein" again ... if nothing else, I remember Basil Rathbone as being quite wonderful in that...)
What is surprising is this "(It's probably a different matter if you're filming a trilogy all in one go, like Lord Of The Rings.)" and this "Problems in the source material."
Because trilogies are actually pretty common in the world. Books are written in trilogies all the time.
In fact, I know the word trilogy, but I have no idea for the equivalent word is for two-in-a-series or even four-in-a-series.
@92BuickLeSabre: Hey man, Quadrilogy was totally hip until they signed onto Nuklear Warhed records, and they started playing at actual venues, man! I miss the days they played at the Voodoo Lounge or at Slim's where you paid 8 bucks for a watered down Jack n Coke and guys in white pancake makeup stared at you while you were at the john, man!
@crashedpc: Remember how their second untitled album was just arpeggiated chords on the Moog and the entire rhythm section consisted of the lead singer and the drummer on Theremins? So good.
@crashedpc: That's probably because you didn't understand it.
It wasn't a cockatoo, it was a cockatiel, also known as the Nymphicus hollandicus or the quarrion. This was a play on words, of course, for sex and death, respectively. More specifically the act of being left or being left dead (carrion).
The dissonance of the bongos, obviously, was to set a tone of the rhythms of sex and of death and of life yet not in the "pop" stylings of "rock" (read: mainstream sex/sex as "naughty" and faux rebellious), but in the harsh and painful reality of chaotic beats and sounds.
And of course it had to be over nine albums, although the reason for nine specifically died with the band. This was the perfect symbolism for how although we frequently speak of our brutal existence on this planet (having sex and dying again and again) as being quite short, that the reality is that the living of it seems to be unendurable and never-ending. That the pain continues long past the point that we could imagine to the point that we simply hope for death - which itself lasts forever and is simply nothing more than the cumulative final reality of our despair.
I'd just like to relish in my internet fame, since I'm the one who originally took that picture of Venom and submitted it to superherohype way back when. Thank you io9 for once again validating my existence.
Seriously, am I the only person in the universe who believes 'Alien 3' was the best of all 4 Alien movies? You had great acting, tension, hopelessness, a very cool death final scene and a cameo by Lance Henriksen. And no Winona Ryder! What else do you people want?
Jedi bothered me when I saw it as a kid, but only as an adult did I realize how sadistic it is. Strangulation, torture by electrocution, Luke's needlessly convoluted plot to take out Jabba, his gleeful announcement that "that's the last mistake you'll ever make," the Emperor pitting father against son and intoning, over and over, "You will die ..." Eww, I'm squicked out all over again.
07/13/09
07/08/09
The sequels on the other hand...
P2, marred by studio interference.
P3 (and P4), by Coscarelli's interference.
07/08/09
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07/08/09
Back to the Future III. Blech.
07/07/09
1. ROTJ
2. ROTS
3. TESB
4. ANH
5. TPM
6. AOTC
07/07/09
07/07/09
Star Trek 3 did not suck. Quite the opposite, in fact, it's a good movie with a lot of action and plenty of heart. Just watched it again on Blu-Ray, and was heartily entertained.
Jedi was 2/3 of a great movie.
Not saying that most 3rd installments don't suck. Indeed, they usually do. Just had to take issue with these 3.
07/07/09
07/07/09
-- except that I think the level of writing in "Last Crusade" showed off a lot of the wit that the late Jeffrey Boam had brought to "Brisco County Jr.," and the Indy backstory was intriguing (enough so to launch a sub-franchise), and many of the set-pieces are among the best in the series: the Nazi book-burning, Henry Sr. bringing down an airplane with a flock of birds, the moment of choice regarding the final destiny of the Grail ...
I think it's a good movie, and is arguably the only good threequel ever made.
(All of this does make me think I need to watch "Son of Frankenstein" again ... if nothing else, I remember Basil Rathbone as being quite wonderful in that...)
07/07/09
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
07/07/09
Because trilogies are actually pretty common in the world. Books are written in trilogies all the time.
In fact, I know the word trilogy, but I have no idea for the equivalent word is for two-in-a-series or even four-in-a-series.
07/07/09
07/07/09
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07/07/09
I know, I know, Wiki.
07/07/09
Also, that wasn't makeup.
07/07/09
Is that a band or an album?
Never heard of it either way. Any good?
07/07/09
07/07/09
It wasn't a cockatoo, it was a cockatiel, also known as the Nymphicus hollandicus or the quarrion. This was a play on words, of course, for sex and death, respectively. More specifically the act of being left or being left dead (carrion).
The dissonance of the bongos, obviously, was to set a tone of the rhythms of sex and of death and of life yet not in the "pop" stylings of "rock" (read: mainstream sex/sex as "naughty" and faux rebellious), but in the harsh and painful reality of chaotic beats and sounds.
And of course it had to be over nine albums, although the reason for nine specifically died with the band. This was the perfect symbolism for how although we frequently speak of our brutal existence on this planet (having sex and dying again and again) as being quite short, that the reality is that the living of it seems to be unendurable and never-ending. That the pain continues long past the point that we could imagine to the point that we simply hope for death - which itself lasts forever and is simply nothing more than the cumulative final reality of our despair.
You should try listening to it again.
07/07/09
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07/07/09
07/07/09
And not the crappy-granola-bar-from-the-80s kind either!
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07/08/09
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07/08/09
The first two are aces, though.
07/07/09